Chuck Scarborough

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Charles "Chuck" Scarborough (born November 4, 1943) is an American veteran television news anchor. He is currently anchoring solo a new 7 p.m. newscast (New York Nightly News) and co-anchors with Sue Simmons at 6 and 11 p.m.

A noted author and aviator, Scarborough has been with television station WNBC since 1974. He has been an anchorman longer than anyone in New York television history except WABC-TV's Bill Beutel, and already holds the record for the longest unbroken tenure behind an English language anchor desk in New York, as WXTV's Rafael Pineda beats Scarborough by two years, having started with his station in 1972. He is the highest paid anchor in New York City making $3 million a year. He has occasionally appeared on NBC News and in the 1980s often anchored prime time NBC Network newsbreaks.

Scarborough has won 31 Emmy Awards, and was one of the first inductees into the New York State Broadcasters Association Hall of Fame in 2005. He was inducted alongside Sue Simmons, his 11 p.m. co-anchor. The pair has been anchoring together since 1980, longer than any other anchor team in New York City television history.

A native of Pittsburgh and a graduate of the The University of Southern Mississippi, he served in the United States Air Force, and currently has a Commercial pilot certificate. Before coming to WNBC, he worked at WNAC-TV (now WHDH-TV) in Boston. In his final commentary on WNAC, he identified the issue of race as the most important challenge facing Boston. A scant few months later, Boston erupted into racial unrest as the result of a federal court order to end its policy of de facto racial segregation in the public schools.

He was the host of the syndicated program Images - A Year in Review in the late 1980s and also anchored the NBC News Digest for NBC News during the 1980s.

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[edit] Simmons, Scarborough Incident

On May 12, 2008, as a news teaser was played during the TV series Medium, Simmons can be heard saying "The fuck are you doing?!"[1] just before the fade to commercial. This reaction was prompted by Scarborough's missing his line in the news story. At 11:06 p.m., during the newscast, Simmons made a public apology on air about the word slip.[2]

[edit] Pop Culture

Scarborough is mentioned in the Fountains of Wayne song "Traffic & Weather" from their 2007 album of the same title. [3]

[edit] Novels

Scarborough has written three novels:

Aftershock was made into a made for television movie, Aftershock: Earthquake in New York in 1999, airing on the CBS television network and its New York O&O WCBS-TV.

[edit] References

  1. ^ YouTube - Sue Simmons Says "Fuck" On Live TV - Drops The "F" Bomb
  2. ^ Huff, Richard; Standora, Leo. "Curses! Anchor Sue Simmons slips", Daily News, 2008-05-13. Retrieved on 2008-05-13. 
  3. ^ Fountains of Wayne lyrics: Traffic and Weather. LyricsReg.com. “Chuck Scarborough turns to Sue Simmons. / Says, sugar, you don't know what you're missin'.

[edit] External links